How did this hatch succeed?

Ewe Mama2

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Hi all!

First off, I want you to know that I was experimenting with this hatch. After reading all the dos and donts of duck incubation, I wanted to test things out and form my own conclusions. I always thought that the conditions under which a duck would hatch eggs in the wild were a lot less stringent than the "requirements" for an acceptable incubator hatch would be. I tried to make less than ideal circumstances to see if the eggs could survive or not.

1. I orderered two different sets of eggs on ebay. One was for 8+ of Khaki Campbells and the other was for 10+ of Silver Appleyards.

2. The KC's arrived first. I received 16 eggs, so that was a shock. I had only wanted a few of each breed, and I figured that was what would hatch out of shipped eggs. That was when I decided to experiment with the hatch. I let them rest for about 12 hours and into the bator (Hovabator Genesis 1588 - no turner) they went.

The Appleyard eggs arrived two days later. I received 12 eggs. After they rested for two hours, into the bator they went, alongside the KC eggs.

3. After turning the eggs three times for the first couple of days, I got busy/lazy and only turned them once or twice per day.

4. At first Khaki candling, I had 6 clears, so out they went. The remaining 10 eggs had great veining. At the AppleYard candling, I had 1 clear and 1 uncertain. The others were looking great.

5. Relative humidity was kept around 60-65% (I don't have a wet bulb), although it did go down to 39% once. Temp remained between 99.5 and 100.9 throughout the entire hatch (except when the incubator was opened for turning and candling, which was very frequently!

6. As I have a 6 year old I'm homeschooling, we made a lesson out of duck development and sometimes candled daily so she could note the changes. (Throughout all of this the uncertain Appleyard remained uncertain.)

7 The KC's started rocking and peeping on day 24. I stopped turning them and turned only the Appleyards. The following day, all 10 of the KC's had pipped. I regularly opened the bator to check for pips and the progress. (That's another big no-no!)

8. I decided to sprinkle water on all the eggs because some of the pipped membranes seemed to be a little dry. The relative humidity went up to 85%.

9. All of the Khaki Campbells hatched within the next 24 hours.

10. The Silver Appleyards were really quiet during the KC hatch, so I was concerned that they weren't going to make it.

11. I removed the shells and chicks at various times, trying to keep it cleaner. After the KC's had finished hatching and the last two dried enough to be put in the brooder, I removed all of the Appleyard eggs from the incubator, laid them on the floor and cleaned out the bator (It was really stinky) quickly and thoroughly. I then put the eggs back in the bator. They had probably been out for about 10 minutes, tops.

12. Later that evening, I checked on the eggs and noticed some pips. I finally decided to pitch egg #24, the one that had been questionable all along. It was dark under its shell and showed no signs of life, so I figured it was rotten.

13. Within the next 36 hours, all 10 of the remaining eggs hatched.

14. I now have 20 healthy happy ducklings (pics under two different postings in the Ducks forum) from shipped eggs that I tried to ruin. How did this happen? Other people can't get any shipped eggs to hatch no matter how much they go "by the rules" and baby their eggs while I purposefully did everything wrong, but still had a good hatch. This isn't fair at all!

I'm probably going to get a lot of scolding/criticism for this post, but I genuinely want to understand how my eggs could have possibly hatched despite all of the rule breaking on my part.

Thank you for your insight.
 
Have you ever heard of those parents who do everything "right" and keep their kids sheltered and uptight, and when they grow up they go crazy and do all the wrong things? I think the same applies to eggs. You do really bad or really good and you may screw things up. You gotta find a happy medium. I mean like you said God (I'm saying God cause thats what I believe but what ever you believe insert that name) made animals to survive the wild. If conditions are too bad, they probably will die. If conditions are too good, well the egg was built to sustain mild damage, maybe if it's not handled like it would be in the wild too much protection can suffocate it. Figurativiely speaking. IDK though. I just think thats the way God made them.
 
I agree with vkp23. That could be why.
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I had a similar thing happen to our chicken eggs(that are hatching right now). We just built an incubator and are trying to mimic what a broody hen would do; our temp. wasn't perfect and humidity wasn't very good either, and we had many temp ups and downs. But wouldn't this happen when I broody hen got off to relieve herself, eat, drink, etc.? Wouldn't the eggs get cooler? So what's the harm in them getting a bit cooler in a bator? And in nature, broody hens don't regulate the humidity. Sure, they know that if the eggs get too cool then the embryos will die, but throughout the days that a broody hen is sitting, I think that there can be quite a lot of humidity and temp. changes.

So, we decided to kinda ignore the temp. and hum. meters. I mean we added a little warm water when hum. was too low, and since the bator got too hot a lot of times, we cracked the cover open a tiny bit and added water and then just ignored temp. and hum. If it gets a little cool, it gets a little cool. But it does go back up. If hum. gets too low, we add some water. All we did was focused on candling and turning the eggs. And on last Monday, we got 1 egg to hatch!(except it was under a broody for most of incubation and got abandoned, and we did help it because it got stuck...low humidiy) and right now we are waiting for more pips.
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So basically we are trying to mimic a broody hen. it can ruin a lot of eggs if you are constantly trying to regulate the temp. Just use a technique and stick with it; let mother nature do the rest.
Hopefully it works for us!
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Thank you so much for your input.

I know it is totally up to God, but what an awesome show of his greatness! No matter what I did to undermine the hatch's chances for success, he said, "Nope, these babies are going to hatch, because I want them to!"
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That'll teach me to try to "control" things!
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Now I just hope he will provide enough housing for all of these little balls of fluff! I envisioned maybe 8 ducks, not 20!
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